Shao Elichilia R, Kifaro Emmanuel G, Chilumba Innocent B, Nyombi Balthazar M, Moyo Sikhulile, Gaseitsiwe Simani, Musonda Rosemary, Johannessen Asgeir, Kibiki Gibson, Essex Max
Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Center, Moshi, Tanzania Kilimanjaro Christian Medical University College, Moshi, Tanzania Kilimanjaro Clinical Research Institute, Moshi, Tanzania
Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Center, Moshi, Tanzania.
J Antimicrob Chemother. 2014 Jul;69(7):1928-32. doi: 10.1093/jac/dku087. Epub 2014 Apr 11.
In resource-limited settings, it is a challenge to get quality clinical specimens due to poor infrastructure for their collection, transportation, processing and storage. Using dried blood spots (DBS) might be an alternative to plasma for HIV-1 drug resistance testing in this setting. The objectives of this study were to determine mutations associated with antiretroviral resistance among children <18 months old born to HIV-1-infected mothers enrolled in prevention of mother-to-child transmission services in northern Tanzania.
Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Center (KCMC) Clinical Laboratory is the zonal centre for early infant diagnosis using DBS in northern Tanzania. DBS were collected from January 2011 to December 2012. Mothers were kept on triple therapy and single-dose nevirapine before pregnancy and during labour, respectively. Infants were given single-dose nevirapine and most of them were breastfed. Genotypic resistance was determined in those with a viral load of >400 copies/mL.
Genotypic resistance mutations were detected in 13 of 46 children (28%). HIV-1 genotypes were A1 (n = 27), C (n = 10), A/D (n = 4), D (n = 3) and CRF10_CD (n = 2). The median age was 12 weeks (IQR 6-28). The mean log10 viral load was 3.87 copies/mL (SD 0.995). All major mutations were detected in the reverse transcriptase gene and none in the protease gene region. The most frequent mutations were Y181C (n = 8) and K103N (n = 4), conferring resistance to non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors.
One-third of infants newly diagnosed with HIV in northern Tanzania harboured major drug resistance mutations to currently used antiretroviral regimens. These mutations were detected from DBS collected from the field and stored at room temperature. Surveillance of drug resistance among this population in resource-limited settings is warranted.
在资源有限的环境中,由于临床标本采集、运输、处理和储存的基础设施较差,获取高质量的临床标本是一项挑战。在这种情况下,使用干血斑(DBS)可能是用于HIV-1耐药性检测的血浆替代物。本研究的目的是确定在坦桑尼亚北部参加预防母婴传播服务的HIV-1感染母亲所生的18个月以下儿童中与抗逆转录病毒耐药性相关的突变。
乞力马扎罗基督教医疗中心(KCMC)临床实验室是坦桑尼亚北部使用DBS进行早期婴儿诊断的区域中心。DBS于2011年1月至2012年12月采集。母亲在怀孕前和分娩期间分别接受三联疗法和单剂量奈韦拉平治疗。婴儿接受单剂量奈韦拉平治疗,大多数进行母乳喂养。对病毒载量>400拷贝/mL的患者进行基因型耐药性检测。
46名儿童中有13名(28%)检测到基因型耐药突变。HIV-1基因型为A1(n = 27)、C(n = 10)、A/D(n = 4)、D(n = 3)和CRF10_CD(n = 2)。中位年龄为12周(四分位间距6 - 28)。平均log10病毒载量为3.87拷贝/mL(标准差0.995)。所有主要突变均在逆转录酶基因中检测到,蛋白酶基因区域未检测到。最常见的突变是Y181C(n = 8)和K103N(n = 4),赋予对非核苷类逆转录酶抑制剂的耐药性。
在坦桑尼亚北部新诊断出感染HIV的婴儿中,三分之一对目前使用的抗逆转录病毒治疗方案存在主要耐药突变。这些突变是从现场采集并在室温下储存的DBS中检测到的。在资源有限的环境中对该人群进行耐药性监测是必要的。